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Bezig met laden... Enter Sir Robert (1955)door Angela Thirkell
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Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. 'Sir Robert Graham came in' are the last words of this book which is part of Angela Thirkell's Barsetshire Series. It is set in high society, reasonably high anyway, society circles, full of eccentric family members who love and hate or more like just dislike, listen and don't listen to each other. Among them are landowners, vicars, churchwardens, bright and silly young girls, farmers, men back from the war, yokels, pigs and odd job men who patch up carpets in churches, some with strange local accents. Nothing happens at all. This does not stop the enjoyment of the book. It is written so cleverly, whimsically and carefully; it gets to the heart of human nature; and is very funny. Take, for instance, the first sentence in chapter 8: 'Lady Graham, whose business-like mind was often a great surprise to people who had thought of her as a kind of lovely piece of seaweed, drifting with the tide, rocked by the surges, had not forgotten her plan to get Mrs Morland to Holdings', page 233. This volume is set around the time just after British Railways nationalisation in 1948, as corroborated by words on page 264: 'Owing to the increasing horribleness of the food and service in restaurant cars since the noble Great Western Railway had to bow its head'. Lovely. There is even a Proustian hint within the story, for instance, the sending up of the snobbery, a la Legrandin, of Mr Scatcherd, an 'artist' who says, pages 104/05: 'That now is a question that needs a power of thinking. To begin at the beginning, we artists see quite different to Others. Where you may see a church, or a tree, we see a Composition, and here, today, setting on this here camp-stool...I seen a Composition that will Live'. First of all, ignore this cover art! This painting does not resemble any character in this book, especially not retiring career soldier Sir Robert (who enters with the final sentence of the book)! Unlike many Thirkell novels in this series, geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de reeks(en)Barsetshire Books (24)
The book begins with Lady Graham's announcement of the imminent return of the elusive Sir Robert Graham and ends as Sir Robert enters the house. What happens in between is more than usually 'Much Ado About Nothing'. We meet Vicar Choyce whose vacillation is matched by Lady Graham's vagueness (as she becomes more and more like Lady Emily). Much of the action consists of a stately pavanne between them as they decide and undecide and decide again that Sir Robert (when he returns -- any moment now) will take over the churchwarden's duties from the ailing Squire Halliday. Meanwhile, Edith Graham, as the only Ingenue in sight, enjoys the vague attentions of three young men, including her cousin Lord Mellings (Ludovic), until Uncle David Leslie and wife sweep her off for a visit to America. Still between generations, Thirkell produces the only book so far with no marriages or engagements. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)823.912Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1901-1945LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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This installment had none of these things. The main characters were largely lesser-known players, which would have been fine if they were given a substantial plot. But there was only one plot thread, which mostly involved a few people visiting one family, and that family returning the visit. So much dialogue, and all of it fairly pointless. There is a tiny flicker of romantic interest which is left to be resolved in a later novel. Towards the end, Thirkell brings her alter-ego character into the story in a way that fills a few more pages with incessant conversation, but in no way contributes to the already unsubstantial plot.
Were it not for my irrational desire to “complete” this series, I would not have finished this book. ( )